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Tekedia Institute and Nnamdi Azikiwe University Awka To Develop New Programs

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Tekedia Institute is very excited to announce that Tekedia Institute and Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka (UNIZIK) are working together to deepen entrepreneurial capitalism through quality business education. Largely, these institutions will co-develop programs and serve communities. More so, for selected learners, Tekedia Institute and UNIZIK will co-award Tekedia Mini-MBA. UNIZIK is an amazing university and I am extremely proud of  the promises ahead. We will share more details later.

As we expand into India and other domains, we will drive a glocal strategy where we remain locally relevant even as we move into the global markets, making sure we stay true to that mission: “to discover, and make scholars, noble, bright, and useful”.

I invite you to visit school.tekedia.com and see what we’re doing to prepare a new generation of market winners in and out of Africa.

The illegality of the Ikoyi marriage registry: No cause for alarm yet (full press release)

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This post follows this one on the same topic.

The news of the illegality of the marriage conducted in the Ikoyi marriage registry and other federal marriage registries has been trending for days. For the record, the piece was first published on this platform with other news blogs carrying the news and most instances misquoted the original author  till it went viral like a wildfire and started causing panic in the hearts of many married couples.

It caught the attention of almost everyone, including celebrities and popular figures questioning the legality of their purported marriage they conducted in the Ikoyi registry, people became uncertain if they are legally and statutorily married to their spouse or they are just cohabitating and fornicating.

The author has been getting numerous mails and calls from readers for consultation and counseling with callers seeking what they should do next to make their marriage legal and statutory.

The office of the permanent secretary and principal registrar of marriages of the Ministry of Interior took a swift action on this matter and have released an official memo to this effect and openly rebuffing the news that the Court never did say that marriages conducted by Ikoyi marriage registry and other federal marriage registries are illegal and invalid (the full press statement is reproduced here).

To this effect, as we may think that this official memo from the office of the principal Registrar of marriages is politics as usual, purportedly married couples whose marriages were conducted at Ikoyi Marriage registry or other federal marriage registries should be at peace and take the official memo released by the office of the permanent secretary and Registrar of marriages for it and till the court takes the next line of action, maybe on appeal on this matter.

The best advice is for everyone to stay away from federal marriage registries for now till when the highest court (the Supreme Court) makes a pronouncement on this and it will always be better in your interest to consult a lawyer.

PRESS STATEMENT-Marriages

All Marriages conducted by the Ikoyi Marriage Registry are illegal and Invalid [updated]

Byte Launches A Social Payment App – Pay via Email, Phone, Tag, etc

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They are technical prodigies and they are amazing. Led by KHALID ISMAIL, Byte has a great playbook on digital commerce in Africa. The first phase is social payment. Yes, Byte has built a social payment app which simplifies the process of paying, requesting payments, or splitting payments between friends.

With Byte, you can use an email, phone number, or byte tag to pay people directly from your bank account or credit card. Byte launched today.

Tekedia Capital is super-excited to be working with these young people. And I ask you to download their app  and visit their website.

UK Takes Nigeria Out of Covid-19 Travel Ban List

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Nigeria managed the covid-19 paralysis better than the UK. Yes, you can throw those statistics that Nigeria does not keep records for a decent comparison. Yet, we do not need government data to know when citizens are dying here and there. So, allowing the UK to seem like a more serious country on curtailing covid-19 would have been a big mistake.

That was why I joined some Africans to demand that UK rescinds its ban on travels from Africa because technically it was UK that was risking Africans including Nigeria as it recorded more troubles during the pandemic than Nigeria: ‘The United Kingdom will remove the travel red list that has pitied it against African countries who saw the decision as “discriminatory” and “unjustifiable.”’

The United Kingdom will remove the travel red list that has pitied it against African countries who saw the decision as “discriminatory” and “unjustifiable.”

The government has said that all 11 countries will be removed from the UK’s travel red list from 4am on Wednesday, putting an end to the diplomatic controversy the decision has stirred.

Late November, the UK announced it has placed Angola, Botswana, Eswatini, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, South Africa, Zambia and Zimbabwe on a red list to prevent further spread of Omicron, the newest covid variant, from these countries.

The travel ban was widely condemned especially in Africa, with the UN calling it “travel apartheid.” The UK had earlier said it will not reverse the decision even as countries like Nigeria threatened to reciprocate.

I thank the leaders of the UK for doing just that. Now, we can leave our blackouts, bad roads, unworking clinics, insecurity, etc and travel easily to the UK. As the 2023 approaches, the UK health system will be welcoming many special visitors from Nigeria who need to be “cleansed and checked” by doctors  to avoid distraction during campaigns. So, we’re ready: 2022 is the year for UK travel; covid-19 restrictions gone!

UK Removes 11 African Countries from Covid-19 Red List

 

UK Removes 11 African Countries from Covid-19 Red List

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The United Kingdom will remove the travel red list that has pitied it against African countries who saw the decision as “discriminatory” and “unjustifiable.”

The government has said that all 11 countries will be removed from the UK’s travel red list from 4am on Wednesday, putting an end to the diplomatic controversy the decision has stirred.

Late November, the UK announced it has placed Angola, Botswana, Eswatini, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, South Africa, Zambia and Zimbabwe on a red list to prevent further spread of Omicron, the newest covid variant, from these countries.

The travel ban was widely condemned especially in Africa, with the UN calling it “travel apartheid.” The UK had earlier said it will not reverse the decision even as countries like Nigeria threatened to reciprocate.

However, the health authority is changing its mind as the UK becomes the epicenter of Omicron variant. Health Secretary Sajid Javid said it had spread so widely the rules no longer had much purpose.

“Now that there is community transmission of Omicron in the UK and Omicron has spread so widely across the world, the travel red list is now less effective in slowing the incursion of Omicron from abroad,” he told Parliament.

“Whilst we will maintain our temporary testing measures for international travel we will be removing all 11 countries from the travel red list effective from 4am tomorrow morning.”

Besides the racial discrimination it portends, the travel restriction brought additional financial burden upon travelers. All UK arrivals from red list countries are required to pay for and self-isolate in a pre-booked, government-approved hotel for 10 days.

The BBC reported that some travelers had paid thousands of pounds to stay in government-approved quarantine hotels, with complaints of chaotic organization and inedible food during their stays.

But with all 11 countries being removed from that list, it was confirmed that those currently in managed quarantine would be allowed to leave early and “follow the rules as if they had arrived from a non-red list country,” the report said.

While the government claimed that it put countries on the red list to act quickly to slow the spread of Omicron, targeting African countries belied the decision. It also supported the belief that the restrictions were geopolitical not scientific as many western countries with rising Omicron cases were exempt from the red list.

The hospitality industry has joined voices with African leaders who called for the travel ban to be lifted. Tim Alderslade, head of trade group Airlines UK, said emptying the red list made “complete sense” but that the government should also scrap the remaining travel restrictions.

Last month, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa called the travel restrictions “hasty” and “discriminatory,” adding that it will dent countries’ chances for economic recovery.

“The only thing the prohibition on travel will do is to further damage the economies of the affected countries and undermine their ability to respond to, and recover from the pandemic,” he said.